Title: Practical Strategies for Enrollment Management
1Practical Strategies for Enrollment Management
- Cheryl Brown, Director of Admissions
- Peter J. Partell, Director of Institutional
Research - Binghamton University
- State University of New York
- June 2001
2Why Institutional Researchers Should Care About
Enrollment Management
- A way to contribute to one of your colleges or
universitys primary strategic goals. - It allows you another avenue to be involved in
influencing policy and decision making on campus. - It is interesting and fun (read stressful and
anxiety-producing).
3Definitions of Enrollment Management
- Enrollment management is an organizational
concept and a systematic set of activities
designed to enable educational institutions to
exert more influence over their student
enrollments. Organized by strategic planning and
supported by institutional research, enrollment
management activities concern student college
choice, transition to college, student attrition
and retention, and student outcomes. --Don
Hossler
4Definitions of Enrollment Management
- Enrollment management is the coordinated effort
of a college or university to influence the size
and characteristics of the institutions student
body... enrollment is managed through a variety
of strategies including admissions, pricing,
financial aid, and advising. Well designed and
well executed institutional research is the key
to successful enrollment management.--Craig
Clagett
5How do you do Enrollment Management?
- The key is to use the data that you currently
have at your disposal and look at it in different
ways. - Analyses need to be guided by your institutions
strategic plan so that all the offices involved
work towards the same goals.
6Identify the Strategic Goals of Your Institution
- Increase campus revenue?
- Improve (maintain) quality/selectivity?
- Change demographics? (diversity geographic and
race ethnic, talent, programs, schools,
non-traditional, traditional, e-learners,
freshmen, transfer, graduate, etc.) - Goals have to be aligned with the reality of your
campus - can your institution support the
students it is trying to attract?
7The Enrollment Funnel
8IRs Role in Enrollment Management
- Spearhead analysis, reporting, and data
collection that is about how to move prospective
students (and then students) through the various
stages of the enrollment funnel.
9Some Tools
- EPS - Enrollment Planning Service
- CIRP - Cooperative Institutional Research Program
- Alumni Surveys (e.g., AOS)
- Student Opinion Surveys (e.g.., SOS)
- College Board -- Admitted Student Questionnaire,
Admitted Class Evaluation Service
- National Student Clearinghouse
- Surveys (e.g., US News, Kiplingers, Wired) and
articles -- What are they saying about your
institution? - Campus data files
10Building Your Inquiry Pool Feeding Your Funnel
- You cant enroll without adequate inquiries. As
there is pressure to grow, the inquiry pool must
be large enough to sustain the growth. This is
true by market segment. - Example -- Our goal for Engineering School was
set too high because we asked only half the
questions - can you teach more students? Should
also have looked at the funnel. - Build Inquiries based on the segments you would
like to enroll and their fit with your
institution - what do you know about who
succeeds? (grades, retention, etc.)
11Feeding Your Funnel (continued)
- Identifying Target Markets
- Analyses aimed at shaping your inquiry pool to
ultimately enroll the students that meet your
strategic goals. - Result will assist in deciding which names to
buy, places to travel, ads to place -- using
resources most effectively. - Sources to tap
- High school market research (identify target
schools that graduate the types of students you
want) - Population projections (e.g., high school grads
by state/county) - Local data bases (identify feeder high schools or
community colleges) - Prospects/Name buys (e.g., ETS, Phi Theta Kappa,
etc.) . - U.S. Census
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13Locations of Targeted High Schools
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18Segmenting Targeted Markets
- Buy names from the markets you identified based
on how you choose to segment them (again,
strategic goals) - Examples may include - gender, geography, income,
schools/programs, race/ethnic and socio-economic
diversity, SAT/ACT Scores, GPA
19Mining Local Databases
- Feeder schools
- Understanding which schools give you the highest
numbers of students and which could give you more
- analyze through the lens of the funnel - Shape the message to each high school (CIRP ASQ)
20Turning Inquiries Into Applicants Qualifying
Your Inquiry Pool
- Are you collecting inquiry data? Are you
collecting appropriate/useful inquiry data? - How interested is the student?
- How often and in what form have they inquired?
- Inquiry Source - self-initiated v. school
initiated - Would you expect there to be a
difference? - What are your yield rates based on inquiry type?
21Distribution of student interest
Least likely to enroll at your school no matter
what you do.
Most likely to enroll at your school no matter
what you do.
Influence
C
A
B
Students falling in this area will not enroll
unless the institution does something to
influence their decision.
22Turning Inquiries into Applicants - Marketing
- Understanding why students apply. What they
respond to (Academic Programs, Financial Aid and
Scholarships, etc.) Who does not apply and why? - How do students learn about colleges?
- Data on success, strengths, e.g., grad rates,
placement rates, surveys, rankings, USP,etc. - Understanding who will persist or succeed.
- Arm your admissions recruiters to the teeth.
23Turning Applicants into Admitted Students
- Who should be offered admission to shape your
class (strategic goals of size, quality,
diversity, etc. ) -- projection, projections,
projections. - Example Always tuned to the quality of our
freshmen, yet our forecasting of yield did not
involve quality at all -- only school of
application -- our actions were not in synch with
one of our strategic goals.
24Admissions Index
- College qualification -- often based on
combination of - high school performance (GPA, Rank, etc)
- test scores (SAT, ACT, TOEFL)
- rigor of high school coursework (AP?)
- applicants interest in attending? (see Wall St.
Journal 5/29/2001).
25Why Use an Admissions Index? to influence the
size and characteristics of the institutions
student body - Claggett
- It ties your strategic goals to your admissions
decisions because what the index should be built
based on what matters to your institution. - Aids in more consistent admission decisions
across counselors. - Gives you a more accurate yield analyses/class
projection. - Allows for the control and tracking of the
students you want.
26Turning Offers into Enrolled Students Analyses
to Assist with Yield
- What do we mean by yield? -- deposits versus
enrollment - which should you use? - General rule the more refined your look at the
yield data, the better able you are to directly
impact your strategic goals Go to spreadsheet
example - Be careful that analysis not too refined so as
numbers are too small to be meaningful. - Who are your competitors?
- Again, may vary by your target groups!!!
27Competitors Sample of data from Enrollment
Search (National Student Clearinghouse)
Remember Your competitors are likely to be
different for different types of students
28Enroll (yield)
- Turning offers into enrolled students.
- Financial Aid
- Who you can and cant impact
- How much money it takes to affect a students
decision. - Monitoring deposits melt rates
29Financial Aid and Yield
30Enroll (yield)
- Deposit Analysis - monitor deposit rates to
determine whether youre on track to yield the
class (Summers are hot, whos melting?)
31One last point on yield
- Segmented Marketing Messages
- Unique Selling points
- IR as PR
- defining your image
- defining your message
- using data to reinforce your image
32Analyzing and Supporting Retention
- Identify who left and why - use data! Do not
rely on conventional wisdom - Example - IUT denials leave - internal pressure
was based on conventional wisdom - data didnt
support - Analysis may incorporate
- National Student Clearinghouse
- Surveys (homegrown, CIRP, SOS - verify
reliability - Recent SOS Results) - Exit Interviews/Focus Groups
- Look at impact of financial aid
- Look for courses - Killer Courses
33Analyzing and Supporting Retention
- Identify who stays and why - analyze your
satisfaction ratings, your alumni surveys. - Benchmark your results against peer norms
- Provide the right people with the data to help
them build on institutional strengths (read
satisfaction) and take steps to address
institutional weaknesses.
34Conclusion
- Enrollment Management is at the heart of success
for every type of institution - Analysis of data provides the keys to successful
enrollment management - Who has the potential to impact data collection,
analysis, and dissemination to the people who
make decisions Institutional Researchers
35Conclusion
- Become the campus expert on the available tools
- Analyze data with an eye towards marketing and PR
and the enrollment funnel - Work to develop and support a campus culture of
shared information and shared goal setting - Be recognized as THE resource for enrollment
management expertise - Insist that IR is at the table when key decisions
are made.
36Thank you!
- Contact us
- Cheryl Brown
- Director of Admissions
- cbrown_at_binghamton.edu
- Peter J. Partell
- Director of Institutional Research
- partell_at_binghamton.edu
- Binghamton University
- State University of New York
- June 2001
37Resources
- CIRP Freshman Survey Offered by HERI
- CIRP Cooperative Institutional Research Program
- Higher Education Research Institute (HERI)
- Graduate School of Education Information
Studies - University of California, Los Angeles
- 3005 Moore Hall, Box 951521
-
- Phone (310) 825-1925 Fax (310) 206-2228
E-Mail HERI_at_ucla.edu -
- Website http//www.gseis.ucla.edu/heri/heri.htm
l - -------------------------------------------------
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--------- - Alumni Outcomes Survey Student Opinion Survey
Both offered by ACT - ACT - American College Testing
- American College Testing
- 2201 North Dodge Street
- P.O. Box 168
- Iowa City, Iowa 52243-0168
-
- Phone (319) 337-1000
38Resources
- The Enrollment Planning Service (EPS) and
Admitted Student Questionnaire (ASQ) are offered
by the College Board - Middle States Regional Office
- 3440 Market St.
- Suite 410
- Philadelphia, Pa 19104-3338
- Phone 215-387-7600
- Fax 215-387-5805
- www.collegeboard.org
-
- The contact information for ETS is
-
- Corporate HeadquartersEducational Testing
ServiceRosedale RoadPrinceton, NJ 08541
USA(609) 921-9000FAX 609-734-5410E-mailmoets
info_at_ets.org - www.ets.org
-
-
39Resources
-
- National Student Clearinghouse
- National Student Clearinghouse2191 Fox Mill
Road, Suite 300Herndon, VA 20171-3019 - Phone (703) 742-7791
- Fax (703) 742-7792
- Email service_at_studentclearinghouse.org
- http//www.studentclearinghouse.org/
-
-